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USPTO employees will gladly answer questions about the application process. However, USPTO employees cannot: conduct trademark searches for the public; comment on the validity of registered marks; answer questions on whether a particular mark or type of mark is eligible for trademark registration; or offer legal advice or opinions about common law trademark rights, state registrations, or trademark infringement claims.
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If you file a paper application, and it meets the minimum filing requirements, the USPTO will assign a serial number and send a filing receipt. You should review this receipt for accuracy, and notify the USPTO of any errors, following the directions on the receipt. An electronically-filed application must include the same information to receive a filing date. However, at the time of filing, an email summary, including a serial number, is sent. No paper filing receipt is generated. If through later review the USPTO determines that the application did not include the required information, we will cancel the serial number and filing date, return the application, and refund the filing fee. If you transmit your application over the Internet, the filing date is the date the transmission reaches the USPTO server. Otherwise, the filing date of an application is the date the USPTO receives the application. NOTE: Receiving a filing date does not mean that you have satisfied ALL registration requirements. To obtain a registration, you must comply with all application requirements, and overcome any refusal(s) issued by the examining attorney during examination. Although only the minimum filing requirements must appear in your initial application to receive a filing date, submitting all available information requested in the application form will help reduce delays in processing your application. See below for more information about these requirements.
NAME OF THE APPLICANT The application must be filed in the name of the owner of the mark . The owner of the mark is the person or entity who controls the nature and quality of the goods identified by the mark and/or the services rendered in connection with the mark. The owner may be an individual, corporation, partnership, or other type of legal entity. Do I have to be a U.S. citizen to apply? No. However, if you do not reside in the United States, you may appoint a "domestic representative" as part of the application process (see below).
NAME AND ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE The name and address for correspondence is the address where the USPTO will send communications concerning the application. It may be that of the applicant or the applicants legal representative. Also, an applicant residing outside the United States may list a domestic representative, that is, the name and address of any person residing in the U.S. "upon whom notices or process may be served for proceedings affecting the mark." You must keep your mailing address up-to-date with the USPTO. This can be done through TEAS at http://www.uspto.gov/teas/index.html (/teas/index.html) . If you send a notice of change of address on paper, please include at the top of the request a "heading" listing the applicant's name, mark, and the application serial number. Mail the change of address to: Commissioner for Trademarks P.O. Box 1451 Alexandria , VA 22313-1451
DEPICTION OF THE MARK ("THE DRAWING") Every application must include a clear drawing of the mark you want to register. We use the drawing to file the mark in the USPTO search records and to print the mark in the Official Gazette and on the registration certificate. TEAS (Trademark Electronic Application System) generates a proper drawing for you, based on the information you enter. See TMEP 807.05 (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/0800.htm#_T80705) for more information about electronically-submitted drawings. If you are preparing the drawing page yourself, use white, non-shiny paper that is 8 inches wide by 11 inches long (21.59 cm by 27.94 cm). The mark can be no larger than 3.5 inches high by 3.5 inches wide (8 cm by 8 cm). The drawing page should include a "heading" with the following elements: applicants name; correspondence address; uspto.gov//Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp
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10/11/2010 Basic Facts About Trademarks p ; listing of goods and/or services; and dates of use (if already using the mark in commerce); or, wording "Intent to Use."
The representation of the mark must then appear below the heading, in the middle of the page, in the proper format for either a "standard character" drawing or a "stylized or special form" drawing. Once filed, you cannot make a material change to your mark. What is a "standard character" drawing (formerly known as a "typed" drawing)? You may submit a standard character drawing if: All letters and words in the mark are depicted in Latin characters; All numerals in the mark are depicted in Roman or Arabic numerals; The mark includes only common punctuation or diacritical marks; and The mark does not include a design element. 37 C.F.R. 2.52(a). You must also submit the following statement: The mark is presented in standard character format without claim to any particular font style, size or color. You may depict the mark in any font style; may use bold or italicized letters; and may use both uppercase and lowercase letters, all uppercase letters or all lowercase letters. See TMEP 807.03 (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/0800.htm#_T80703) for further information. The Office has created a standard character set that lists letters, numerals, punctuation marks, and diacritical marks that may be used in a standard character drawing, available on the Office's website at http://teas.uspto.gov/standardCharacterSet.html (http://teas.uspto.gov/standardCharacterSet.html) . If the applicant wants to register characters that are not in the set, then the applicant must file a special form drawing. NOTE: Actual size would be 8" x 11" (21.6 cm x 27.9 cm).
Applicants Name: A-OK Software Development Group Correspondence Address: 100 Main Street, Any Town, MO 12345 Goods and Services: Computer services, namely on-line magazine in the field of business management Date of First Use: January 15, 1995 Date of First Use in Commerce: May 15, 1995 Standard Character Claim: The mark is presented in standard character format without claim to any particular font style, size or color. The Mark:
THEORYTEC
What is a "Stylized or Special Form" drawing? If the particular style of lettering is important or the mark includes color or a design or logo, you must select the "stylized or special form" drawing format. The drawing page should show a black and white image of the mark unless color is claimed as a feature of the mark, no larger than 3.5 inches by 3.5 inches (8 cm by 8 cm). The drawing in special form must be a substantially exact representation of the mark as it appears on the specimen or on the foreign registration, as appropriate. The following is an example of a proper special form drawing: NOTE: Actual size would be 8" x 11" (21.6 cm x 27.9 cm), with an image no larger than 3.5 inches by 3.5 inches (8 cm by 8 cm). Applicants Name: Pinstripes, Inc. Applicants Address: 100 Main Street, Any Town, MO 12345 Goods and Services: Clothing, namely baseball caps and t-shirts uspto.gov//Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp
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10/11/2010 Services: Basic Facts About Trademarks g, y p Goods and Date of First Use: Intent-to-Use Application Date of First Use in Commerce: Intent-to-Use Application
The Mark:
PINSTRIPES
What if I want to show color on the drawing? If you want to register a mark in color, you must submit a color drawing. 37 C.F.R. 2.52(b)(1). You must also submit: (1) a color claim naming the colors that are a feature of the mark; and (2) a separate statement describing where the color(s) appear on the mark. See TMEP 807.07 (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/0800.htm#_T80707) for further information.
GOODS AND/OR SERVICES You must list the specific goods/services for which registration is sought, regardless of the basis for the application. For information on "basis," see BASIS FOR FILING (#basis) . If based on use in commerce, you must already be using the mark in commerce on or in connection with all the goods and/or services listed. If based on intent to use, on a foreign application or registration, or on a request for extension of protection of an international registration to the United States pursuant to section 66(a) of the Trademark Act, you must have a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce on or in connection with all the listed goods and/or services. When specifying the goods and/or services, use clear, concise terms, i.e., common commercial names and language that the general public easily understands. If you fail to list any recognizable goods or services, we will return your application and refund your fee. Please note that the terms in the classification listing of goods and services in the "International Schedule of Classes of Goods and Services (/web/offices/tac/tmfaq.htm#Application018) " are generally too broad and should not be used alone as an identification. Also, an international class number alone is never an acceptable listing. For a listing of acceptable wording for goods and services, see the USPTOs Acceptable Identification of Goods and Services Manual, at http://tess2.uspto.gov/netahtml/tidm.html.
(http://tess2.uspto.gov/netahtml/tidm.html)
Can I change the goods and/or services after filing my application? You can clarify or limit the goods and/or services. However, you may not expand or broaden the identification of goods and/or services after filing the application.
APPLICATION FILING FEE For current fees for trademark applications and amendments, please see the current USPTO Fee Schedule (/web/offices/ac/qs/ope/) . Fee increases, when necessary, usually take effect on October 1 of any given year. Please call 1-800PT0-9199 for up-to-date fee information.
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10/11/2010 Basic Facts About Trademarks For a listing of classes, see International Schedule of Classes of Goods and Services (/web/offices/tac/tmfaq.htm#Application018) .
The filing fee must be paid in United States currency. The USPTO accepts payment by credit card, check or money order, or through an existing USPTO deposit account. Personal, business and certified checks are accepted and should be made payable to "Director of the USPTO." A form for authorizing charges to a credit card can be accessed through all TEAS forms. If you are filing on paper, you can download the form for authorizing credit card charges from the USPTO website at http://www.uspto.gov/web/forms/2038.pdf (/web/forms/2038.pdf) . NOTE: If the application meets the minimum filing requirements and is given a filing date, the application filing fee cannot be refunded.
BASIS FOR FILING The application should include your "basis" for filing. Most U.S. applicants base their application on their current use of the mark in commerce, or their intent to use their mark in commerce in the future. What is "use in commerce"? For the purpose of obtaining federal registration, "commerce" means all commerce that the U.S. Congress may lawfully regulate; for example, interstate commerce or commerce between the U.S. and another country. "Use in commerce" must be a bona fide use of the mark in the ordinary course of trade, and not use simply made to reserve rights in the mark. Generally, acceptable use is as follows: For goods: the mark must appear on the goods, the container for the goods, or displays associated with the goods, and the goods must be sold or transported in commerce. For services: the mark must be used or displayed in the sale or advertising of the services, and the services must be rendered in commerce. If you have already started using the mark in commerce, you may file based on that use. A "use" based application must include a sworn statement (usually in the form of a declaration) that the mark is in use in commerce, listing the date of first use of the mark anywhere and the date of first use of the mark in commerce. A properly worded declaration is included in the USPTO standard application form. The applicant or a person authorized to sign on behalf of the applicant must sign the statement. The application should include a specimen (#SPEC) showing use of the mark in commerce. What is "intent to use"? If you have not yet used the mark, but plan to do so in the future, you may file based on a good faith or bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. You do not have to use the mark before you file your application. An "intent to use" application must include a sworn statement (usually in the form of a declaration) that you have a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. A properly worded declaration is included in the USPTO standard application form. The applicant or a person authorized to sign on behalf of the applicant must sign the statement. NOTE: If you file based on intent to use, you must begin actual use of the mark in commerce before the USPTO will register the mark ; that is, after filing an application based on "intent to use," you must later file another form ("Allegation of Use") to establish that use has begun. See "Additional Requirements for Intent to Use Applications (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp#heading-7) " for more information. Is there any other possible filing basis? Yes. Although not as common, you may base your application on international agreements. Under certain international agreements, if you qualify, you may file in the U.S. based on a foreign application or on a registration in your country of origin. See TMEP Chapter 1000 (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/1000.htm) . Also, section 66(a) of the Trademark Act permits the holder of an international registration to file a request for extension of protection of the international registration to the United States under the Madrid Protocol. See TMEP Chapter 1900 at http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/1900.htm (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/1900.htm) for further information about the Madrid Protocol.
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A specimen is an actual example of how you are using the mark in commerce on or in connection with the identified goods and/or services. This is not the same as the drawing of the mark, which merely represents what you are claiming as the mark. What is a proper specimen for use of a mark on goods (products)? Normally, a specimen for a mark used on goods shows the mark on the actual goods or packaging for the goods. You may submit a tag or label for the goods; a container for the goods; a display associated with the goods; or a photograph of the goods that shows use of the mark on the goods. Do not submit the actual product. Invoices, announcements, order forms, bills of lading, leaflets, brochures, publicity releases, letterhead and business cards generally are NOT acceptable specimens for goods. What is a proper specimen for use of a mark with services? A specimen for a mark used in connection with services must show the mark used in the sale or advertising for the services. You may submit a sign; a brochure about the services; an advertisement for the services; a business card or stationery showing the mark in connection with the services; or a photograph showing the mark as used in rendering or advertising the services. There must be some reference to the type of services rendered on the specimen, i.e., not just a display of the mark itself. For example, if the mark sought to be registered is "XYZ," a business card that only shows the mark "XYZ" would not be acceptable. A business card that states "XYZ REAL ESTATE" would be acceptable. How do I file the specimen? If filing electronically, you must attach an image of your specimen in .jpg format. In order to show the context in which the mark is used, the image should include as much of the label or advertisement as possible. If filing a paper application, the specimen submitted with the application must be flat and no larger than 8 by 11 inches. If you submit a larger specimen, the USPTO will create a facsimile of the specimen, insert it in the application file wrapper, and destroy the original submission. However, specimens consisting of videotapes, audiotapes, CDs or computer diskettes are acceptable for marks, such as sound marks, that cannot be used any other way. When do I file the specimen? For an application based on "use": If you are using the mark in commerce and you file based on that use, you should submit one specimen for each class of goods/services listed in the original application. For an application based on "intent to use": You must submit one specimen for each class of goods/services when filing the "Allegation of Use." See section "Additional Requirements for Intent to Use Applications (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp#heading-7) ". For an application based solely on a foreign application or registration: No specimen is required.
SIGNATURE Who can sign the application? A person who is properly authorized to sign a verification on behalf of the applicant is: a person with legal authority to bind the applicant; or a person with firsthand knowledge of the facts and actual or implied authority to act on behalf of the applicant; or an attorney as defined in 37 C.F.R. 10.1(c) who has an actual written or verbal power of attorney or an implied power of attorney from the applicant. How do I sign a TEAS application? In a TEAS application, you do not apply a conventional signature. Instead, you enter a "symbol" that you have adopted as a signature. The USPTO will accept any combination of letters, numbers, spaces and/or punctuation marks placed between two forward slash ("/") symbols. Examples of acceptable signatures for TEAS applications include /john doe/, /drl/, and /544-4925/.
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LEGAL AND PROCEDURAL REVIEW OF APPLICATION After the USPTO determines that you have met the minimum filing requirements (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp#heading-5) , the application is forwarded to an examining attorney. This may take a number of months. The examining attorney reviews the application to determine whether it complies with all applicable rules and statutes and includes all required fees. Federal registration of trademarks is governed by the Trademark Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C. 1051 et seq., and the Trademark Rules of Practice, 37 C.F.R. Part 2. A complete examination includes a search for conflicting marks, and an examination of the written application, the drawing, and any specimen. If the examining attorney decides that a mark should not be registered, the examining attorney will issue a letter (Office action) explaining any substantive reasons for refusal, and any technical or procedural deficiencies in the application. If only minor corrections are required, the examining attorney may contact the applicant by telephone or e-mail (if the applicant has authorized communication by e-mail). If the examining attorney sends an Office action, the applicants response to the Office action must be received in the Office within six months of the mailing date of the Office action, or the application will be declared abandoned. If the applicant's response does not overcome all objections, the examining attorney will issue a final refusal. To attempt to overcome a final refusal, the applicant may, for an additional fee, appeal to the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, an administrative tribunal within the USPTO. Does the examining attorney search for conflicting marks? Yes. After an application is filed, the assigned examining attorney will search the USPTO records to determine if a conflict, i.e., a likelihood of confusion, exists between the mark in the application and another mark that is registered or pending in the USPTO. The USPTO will not provide any preliminary search for conflicting mark s before an applicant files an application. The principal factors considered by the examining attorney in determining whether there would be a likelihood of confusion are: the similarity of the marks; and the commercial relationship between the goods and/or services listed in the application. To find a conflict, the marks do not have to be identical, and the goods and/or services do not have to be the same. It may be enough that the marks are similar and the goods and/or services related. If a conflict exists between your mark and a registered mark, the examining attorney will refuse registration on the ground of likelihood of confusion. If a conflict exists between your mark and a mark in a pending application that was filed before your application, the examining attorney will notify you of the potential conflict. If the earlier-filed application registers, the Examining Attorney will refuse registration of your mark on the ground of likelihood of confusion. Can I search for conflicting marks before filing? Yes. You should search the USPTO records before filing your application to determine if any party is already claiming rights in a particular mark. You may conduct a search on-line at http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/gate.exe?f=login&p_lang=english&p_d=trmk (http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/gate.exe?f=login&p_lang=english&p_d=trmk) , or by visiting the USPTO Public Search Facility Madison East, 1 st Floor, 600 Dulany Street, Alexandria, Virginia. The library is open between 8:00 a.m. 8:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Both on-line searching and use of the Public Search Facility are free. Additionally, registered and pending trademarks may be searched at a Patent and Trademark Depository Library (PTDL). PTDLs are located throughout the U.S. See PTDL (http://www.uspto.gov/products/library/ptdl/locations/index.jsp) for a listing of their locations, or http://www.uspto.gov/products/library/ptdl/locations/index.jsp (http://www.uspto.gov/products/library/ptdl/locations/index.jsp) . Private trademark search firms will conduct a search for a fee. A listing of search firms can be found in the Yellow Pages of local phone directories or through an Internet search. The USPTO cannot assist you in selecting a search firm. You can check the status of any pending application or registration through the Trademark Application and Registration Retrieval (TARR) database, available on-line at http://tarr.uspto.gov (http://tarr.uspto.gov) . If you do not have access to the Internet, you can call the Trademark Assistance Center at 1-800-786-9199, to request a status check.
Are there other reasons the examining attorney might refuse my mark? Yes. In addition to likelihood of confusion (discussed above), an examining attorney will refuse registration if the mark is:
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10/11/2010 Basic Facts About Trademarks primarily merely descriptive or deceptively misdescriptive of the goods/services; primarily geographically descriptive or primarily geographically deceptively; misdescriptive of the goods/services; primarily merely a surname; or ornamental.
This is not a complete list of all possible grounds of refusal. See Chapter 1200 of the Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure (TMEP), available at http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/ (http://tess2.uspto.gov/tmdb/tmep/) , for a complete discussion of the grounds for refusal of registration of a mark.
PUBLICATION FOR OPPOSITION If the examining attorney raises no objections to registration, or if the applicant overcomes all objections, the examining attorney will approve the mark for publication in the Official Gazette, a weekly publication of the USPTO. The USPTO will send a NOTICE OF PUBLICATION to the applicant stating the date of publication. Any party who believes it may be damaged by registration of the mark has thirty (30) days from the publication date to file either an opposition to registration or a request to extend the time to oppose. An opposition is similar to a proceeding in a federal court, but is held before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, a USPTO administrative tribunal. If no opposition is filed or if the opposition is unsuccessful, the application enters the next stage of the registration process. A Certificate of Registration will issue for applications based on use, or a Notice of Allowance will issue for intent-to-use applications.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION OR NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE If the mark is published based upon the actual use of the mark in commerce, or on a foreign registration, and no party files an opposition or request to extend the time to oppose, the USPTO will normally register the mark and issue a registration certificate about twelve (12) weeks after the date the mark was published. If the mark is published based upon the applicant's bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce, the USPTO will issue a NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE about twelve (12) weeks after the date the mark was published, if no party files either an opposition or request to extend the time to oppose. The applicant then has six (6) months from the date of the NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE to either: use the mark in commerce and submit a STATEMENT OF USE; or request a six-month EXTENSION OF TIME TO FILE A STATEMENT OF USE. Both forms are available at http://www.uspto.gov/teas/index.html (/teas/index.html) . See Additional Requirements for 'Intent to Use' Applications (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp#heading-7) . If the STATEMENT OF USE is filed and approved, the USPTO will issue the registration certificate.
10/11/2010 Basic Facts About Trademarks on or before the day the examining attorney approves the mark for publication in the Official Gazette (an Allegation of Use filed before the mark is approved for publication is called an Amendment to Allege Use); or on or after the day the USPTO issues the Notice of Allowance (an Allegation of Use filed after the Notice of Allowance is issued is called a Statement of Use).
The Amendment to Allege Use and the Statement of Use include the same information, and differ only as to the time when it is filed. If you file an Allegation of Use between the period after the mark is approved for publication but before the Notice of Allowance is issued, the USPTO will return it. Is there a deadline for filing the Statement of Use after the Notice of Allowance issues? Yes. Once the USPTO issues the Notice of Allowance, you have six (6) months to file the Statement of Use. The six-month period runs from the date the USPTO issues the Notice of Allowance, not the date you receive it. If you have not used the mark in commerce, you must file a Request for an Extension of Time to File a Statement of Use (Extension Request) before the end of the six-month period, or the application will be declared "abandoned." What is a Request for an Extension of Time to file a Statement of Use? An Extension Request is a sworn statement signed by the owner or a person authorized to sign on behalf of the owner (see signature (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/Basic_Facts_Trademarks.jsp#sign) ), stating that the applicant still has a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce, and needs additional time to use the mark in commerce. A filing fee of $150 per class of goods/services must accompany the Extension Request. The form for filing the Extension Request is available at http://www.uspto.gov/teas/index.html (/teas/index.html) . The Extension Request, if granted, gives the owner an additional six (6) months to either: use the mark in commerce and file a Statement of Use; or file another Extension Request. You may continue to file Extension Requests every six (6) months. However, you must use the mark and file a Statement of Use within three (3) years of the date the Notice of Allowance issues. The USPTO will not register a mark if, after thirty-six (36) months of the mailing date of the Notice of Allowance, no Statement of Use has been filed.
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Copy Sales Department For copies of files and registrations Government Printing Office
(571) 273-3250
(202) 512-2104
Intent to Use/Divisional Unit For filing Statements of Use, Extension Requests and Requests to Divide Applications
(571) 272-9550
(571) 273-9550
Madrid Processing Unit For filing international applications and other documents under the Madrid Protocol
(571) 272-8910
Office of the Commissioner for Trademarks For filing petitions to the Director
(571) 272-8950
(571) 273-8950
(571) 272-9500
(571) 273-9500
(571) 272-9401
Trademark Assistance Center For general trademark information and printed application forms
(571) 273-9250
Trademark Trial and Appeal Board For filing notices of opposition and petitions to cancel registrations
(571) 272-8500
(571) 273-8500
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